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Empowerment of Lung and Heart-lung Transplant Patients

H

Hannover Medical School (MHH)

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Exercise Training
"Rehabilitation"
Psychotherapy
Lung Transplantation
Heart-Lung Transplantation

Treatments

Behavioral: Moderate aerobic exercise training
Behavioral: resource-activating behavioural training programme
Behavioral: Relaxation training
Behavioral: Intensified anaerobic exercise training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00808600
IFB-application 32

Details and patient eligibility

About

Lung or combined heart-lung transplantation represents an established treatment strategy for patients with end-stage lung disease. Transplantation results in an increased exercise capacity, a better quality of life and - depending on the pulmonary disease - a prolonged life compared to the natural course of the pulmonary disease. However, even after successful organ transplantation, patients realise the often inflated, unrealistic character of their previous expectations due to their continuing dependence on medication, regular control examinations and a higher risk of infections and allograft rejections. Patients have to cope with erupting demands in family, social and work life. It becomes evident that their lives have changed forever. In this context, limitations in mental health like depression and reduced quality of life (QoL) as well as diminished compliance may emerge or even persist. By five years post-transplant, about one-half of the patients meet the criteria of an anxiety disorder. Symptoms of a clinically relevant depression or mood disorder occur in 10 to 15 % of lung transplant patients.

In addition, patients after lung transplantation are often in a poor physical condition and only hold a reduced functional status. Surgery itself, a prolonged weaning period during mechanical ventilation, sepsis, and especially the immunosuppressive medication may long-ranging or permanently limit physical activity, further reducing muscle mass and bodily function.

Some positive effects of either psychological coping skills training or supervised exercise therapy after lung or heart-lung transplantation on QoL and functional status have been described in very few existing pilot studies with small numbers of patients and only short-term follow-up. In addition, although clear evidence points to a mutual amplifying effect of both psychological training and exercise therapy in patients coping with chronic disease, no such study has yet been conducted in the transplantation field.

Therefore, the aim of the investigators randomised controlled study is to prove the differential benefit of a multi-modal resource-activating behavioural training programme combined with an intensified exercise training programme on functional status as well as on QoL in a four-armed design. The investigators hypotheses are: (H1) The multimodal resource-activating behavioural training programme will show better out-comes in the measures of global health-related QoL compared to a relaxation group. (H2) Participants in the intensified anaerobic exercise training will have better outcomes in the measures of exercise-related variables and lung function than the group with moderate aerobic exercise training. (H3) Participants in the behavioural intervention programme and the intensified exercise training will have better outcomes in the measures of global health-related QoL and exercise-related variables compared to the other groups.

Enrollment

132 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 68 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All individuals following lung or combined heart-lung transplantation at Hanover Medical School

Exclusion criteria

  • Severe bronchus stenosis after surgery
  • Uncontrolled hypertension
  • Orthopedic impairment
  • Oxygen desaturation during exercise to less than 89 % without supplemental oxygen
  • Cardiovascular complications that limit exercise tolerance
  • Persistent multi-drug resistant infections (MRSA, VRE, Burkholderia Cepacia, Pandorea)
  • Severe psychiatric disorders

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

132 participants in 4 patient groups

resource-activating training, intensified exercise training
Other group
Description:
combination of the two interventions: resource-activating behavioural training and intensified exercise training
Treatment:
Behavioral: Intensified anaerobic exercise training
Behavioral: resource-activating behavioural training programme
resource-activating training, moderate exercise training
Other group
Description:
combination of the two interventions: resource-activating training and moderate exercise training
Treatment:
Behavioral: Moderate aerobic exercise training
Behavioral: resource-activating behavioural training programme
relaxation training, intensified exercise training
Other group
Description:
combination of the two interventions: relaxation training and intensified exercise training
Treatment:
Behavioral: Intensified anaerobic exercise training
Behavioral: Relaxation training
relaxation training, moderate exercise training
Other group
Description:
combination of the two interventions: relaxation training and moderate exercise training
Treatment:
Behavioral: Moderate aerobic exercise training
Behavioral: Relaxation training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Harald Gündel, Prof. Dr.; Janina Bronisch-Holtze, Dipl.-Psych.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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